Norepinephrine and dopamine concentrations were determined by radioenzymatic assay in discrete gray matter regions of the spinal cords of rats with experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE). Norepinephrine was depleted in most spinal cord regions of EAE rats compared with controls, whereas dopamine depletion in EAE rats was restricted to the cervical dorsal horn. There was a rostrocaudal gradient of norepinephrine reduction in the spinal cords of the EAE rats with most severe depletion in the lumbar region. The results of this experiment confirmed recent anatomical observations that suggested that catecholamine-fluorescent axons and terminals were damaged in spinal cords of rats with EAE.